The ALMA survey to Resolve exoKuiper belt Substructures (ARKS) V: Comparison between scattered light and thermal emission
J. Milli, J. Olofsson, M. Bonduelle, R. Bendahan-West, J. P. Marshall, E. Choquet, A. A. Sefilian, Y. Han, B. Zawadzki, S. Mac Manamon, E. Mansell, C. del Burgo, J. M. Carpenter, A. M. Hughes, M. Booth, E. Chiang, S. Ertel, Th. M. Esposito, Th. Henning, J. Hom, M. R. Jankovic

TL;DR
This study compares scattered light and thermal emission in debris discs to understand dust distribution and the influence of gas, revealing that gas presence may cause small dust grains to be located farther out.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of dust distributions in debris discs using multi-wavelength observations, highlighting the impact of gas on dust dynamics.
Findings
Six discs show dust peaks farther in scattered light than in ALMA data.
Discs with gas tend to have small dust grains farther out.
Most gas-hosting discs exhibit offsets in dust distribution.
Abstract
Debris discs are analogues to our own Kuiper belt around main-sequence stars and are therefore referred to as exoKuiper belts. They have been resolved at high angular resolution at wavelengths spanning the optical to the submillimetre-millimetre regime. Short wavelengths probe the light scattered by such discs, which is dominated by micron-sized dust particles, while millimetre wavelengths probe the thermal emission of millimetre-sized particles. Determining differences in the dust distribution between millimetre- and micron-sized dust is fundamental to revealing the dynamical processes affecting the dust in debris discs. We aim to compare the scattered light from the discs of the ALMA survey to Resolve exoKuiper belt Substructures (ARKS) with the thermal emission probed by ALMA. We focus on the radial distribution of the dust. We used high-contrast scattered light observations obtained…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
